Too many right-wingers in this forum?

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Flat tax % on purchases only. The more you spend the more you pay.
I hope this is not too off topic, but I’d seriously like someone to explain to me why this is such a popular idea. It would actually be a big tax cut for me, but it seems like it would be a pretty large tax increase for most of midde America, particularly home owners, and definately an increase on working Americans under the income tax threshold.

I also wonder how the government would deal with big ticket items. A 20-30% tax on home sales raises some interesting questions. Also, avoiding even state sales taxes on big ticket items is pretty much a science among the wealthy. I recently bought a vintage GA airplane and the broker looked like he was passing a kidney stone when I told him I did not want to do the normal game to avoid CA sales tax. So I suspect collecting 20-30% tax on yachts and jets would be difficult.

Again, I’m not looking to pick a fight, I’m just really curious why this appeals to a lot of folks who would generally end up paying more, not less, as a result.
 
Lets see.

Modern leftism endorses abortion, homosexuality, euthanasia, cloning, birth control, juducial activism, state atheism, etc. I dislike neocons as well, but I’d happily be considered a “right-winger” instead of a leftist.

It took heroic men like Francisco Franco to beat the leftist menace that threatened their countries. And yet today the violent leftists are praised while the “right-wing tyrants” are smeared.

And need I remind you that the Church historically supported capital punishment?
 
Hello,As for the war in Iraq,an explination would be too long.Concerning capital punishment ,read the CCC.#2258,2259,2260,2261,2262,2263,2264,2265,2266.As for capital punishment being responsible for the death of our Lord please remember,our sins(your’s and mine)are responsible for His trial,verdict and death on the cross.🙂
I never thought of it that way. If it had not been for capital punishment none of us might have been saved. :eek:

James
 
I never thought of it that way. If it had not been for capital punishment none of us might have been saved. :eek:

James
I’d recommend Pope Benedict’s JESUS OF NAZARETH. The Pope is not as accessible a writer as John Paul II, but still very much worth the effort.

One of the problems with that list is that it omits CCC 2267, which directly places limits on the use of Capitol punishing, or CCC 2298, which discusses past support for cruel and counterproductive acts (with a direct link to CCC 2267 in the margin).

The other problem is that it views Jesus as a sacrifice ‘we’ (or the Romans) ‘made’. The sacrifice was Jesus’, and His alone. The torture crucifixion itself remains what one would normally think. A barbaric and vile injustice.

In other words, what was done to Christ was evil. Just as the martyring of the Christians that followed was evil. It was Jesus response to that evil that makes it a willing sacrifice for our sakes.

Again, I’d recommend reading what the Pope has to say about it.
 
I hope this is not too off topic, but I’d seriously like someone to explain to me why this is such a popular idea. It would actually be a big tax cut for me, but it seems like it would be a pretty large tax increase for most of midde America, particularly home owners, and definately an increase on working Americans under the income tax threshold.

I also wonder how the government would deal with big ticket items. A 20-30% tax on home sales raises some interesting questions. Also, avoiding even state sales taxes on big ticket items is pretty much a science among the wealthy. I recently bought a vintage GA airplane and the broker looked like he was passing a kidney stone when I told him I did not want to do the normal game to avoid CA sales tax. So I suspect collecting 20-30% tax on yachts and jets would be difficult.

Again, I’m not looking to pick a fight, I’m just really curious why this appeals to a lot of folks who would generally end up paying more, not less, as a result.
You must be TRULY wealthy. Congratulations.

Right now, between Federal, state, local, FICA, medicare, sales, property, auto tax, I pay out somewhere around 40% of my income to the government in tax (I’ll let you know exactly what percentage in April). Although I’ll keep my salary to myself, I will say I’m in the 31% bracket (so you have some idea).

I live in the DC area…in the least wealthy county surrounding the district. Why? Because I can’t afford to live any better. Don’t get me wrong, my 1970-era rambler is a nice place in a relatively quiet area, but I don’t live in a mansion (or even a McMansion). I’m not complaining…I’m just trying to set up the next paragraph:

I hear two out of the three people running for office saying that I’m rich and that I don’t pay enough in taxes. That they want my tax rate to go back to (what was it before…34%?? I don’t remember because I wasn’t that well off when it came into effect). And they may want to increase my marginal rate even more.

If I ended up paying out 27-28% VAT on EVERYTHING and that was the only tax I paid (well, maybe property tax also), that would be WONDERFUL (figure 21% for the Feds and 6-7% for the States/Locals).

Consider this:
  • The “underground economy” would be taxed. If you get paid cash under the table, you’d still pay the tax when you bought something.
  • Granted, illegal transactions wouldn’t be taxed, but other than drugs, gambling, and prostitution, there aren’t really that many illegal transactions going on that wouldn’t be subject to taxation.
  • I have heard some who want to tax all transactions (to include all parts of the supply chain), but I’m not in favor of that, as that would have an inflationary tendency.
  • Consumer imports would need to be taxed at the point of entry (if they are going straight to the consumer), but, to favor our exports, I wouldn’t tax exports…including those going straight to the consumer offshore.
  • I have heard those who would favor allowing a rebate of taxes paid for up to 2 times the poverty rate in sales. That sounds like a good plan to me, because, as you point out, for those in the lower tax brackets, the tax would be perceived as regressive.
  • Part of this tax deal is that the amount of exact tax would be keyed to the budget versus the GDP. In other words, if the government wanted to do a large expansion of government, the VAT rate would go up. If the government wanted to contract, the VAT rate would go down. What that does is as much psychological as fiscal: if the government wants to put a major program in place that costs lots of $$, the taxpayers will be able to perceive in terms they can appreciate (you want to raise my VAT rate by 1% for WHAT??? I don’t THINK so!)
Maybe somebody with your degree of wealth doesn’t need to worry about tax, but for those of us who are in the upper-middle class, it’s a stranglehold. If it wasn’t my family’s means of living, it would be funny to hear a politician call me rich. (We’re not poor…but hardly rich). When I have to watch what I spend, when I get worried when the weather is too cold or too hot (as it might shoot my gas and electric bill way out of budget range), when I have to tap dance twice a year when car insurance bill comes in, the adjective “rich” is simply not appropriate.
 
I never thought of it that way. If it had not been for capital punishment none of us might have been saved. :eek:

James
…what if he’d been murdered, instead? Obviously, the criminals we kill aren’t Jesus, and they are not going to save us, or themselves. If we kill them, they don’t get the CHANCE to change or to be redeemed- to reconcile I mean. We are saved by grace, but we’ve GOT to let them truly know Him. So, to be like Jesus, we should opposed to killing them. The US isn’t as bad as Rome… yet.
 
…what if he’d been murdered, instead? Obviously, the criminals we kill aren’t Jesus, and they are not going to save us, or themselves. If we kill them, they don’t get the CHANCE to change or to be redeemed- to reconcile I mean. We are saved by grace, but we’ve GOT to let them truly know Him. So, to be like Jesus, we should opposed to killing them. The US isn’t as bad as Rome… yet.
So it’s OK to execute them when we are are certain that they truly, truly, truly know Jesus? Are murderers a protected class who get more chances to know Jesus that the average-Joe on the street who might get gunned down before they really truly come to know Jesus? Interesting morality where we lock murderers and other criminals in church, er, jail so they get a chance to know Jesus and we let everyone else walk around and take their chances that they find Jesus before the murderers and criminals do.

What a country!

James 😉
 
Thumbing through some of the threads, I can’t help but notice a good bit of anti-leftism hanging around. .
See now, I have just the opposite impression. This site seems way too left leaning for my taste.
 
Maybe I don’t know what I am. LOL

Pro-life: all life from conception to natural death

Social needs should be from the person not the government in most cases. Social services only for those that can not do for themselves not for those that won’t do for themselves.

Health care needs to be regulated so everyone can afford the basics. Private insurance for elective stuff. You want it you pay for it.

Education freedom to send a child to whatever school I as a parent find appropriate. Home schooling as an option with costs also being covered just as if in a private school.

Flat tax % on purchases only. The more you spend the more you pay. More personal (name removed by moderator)ut into where the money government collects goes to.

Support local store owners and workers. 👍

Care for the earth as if God created it. 😃

Immigration for those that want to work and follow our laws.

Secure borders. Go after the drugs and gangs that wish to do us harm.

No religious regulations freedom of speech and practice. (no human sacrifice or physical harm to others allowed) Words might hurt but everyone has the freedom to say them.

So what am I?
Hopefully, you’re running for President!!! LOL
 
You must be TRULY wealthy. Congratulations.
Well, let’s just say even if I died next year, I’d still be paying estate taxes.
Right now, between Federal, state, local, FICA, medicare, sales, property, auto tax, I pay out somewhere around 40% of my income to the government in tax.
So you would lump social security and medicare in? So everyone who simply buys things gets the benefits, or would it stay seperate so only workers pay in and maintain accounts? Same for unemployment insurance, everyone would pay in?

Aside from those details, why would property taxes go away, or, for that matter, state sales tax? Are we going all federal? That is, can municpalities no longer make capitol investments, etc.?

Last, are you sure it is 40%? At your income level I’d expect you to be gettting a decent morgage interest deduction. Also, at your bracket, I’d be expecting a bit of investing and savings, which are, of course, potentially taxed at a lower rate.
If I ended up paying out 27-28% VAT on EVERYTHING
Again, is it really reasonable for all localities to have the same rates? Where the cost of living is higher, public sector entities pay the higher rates as well.
Consider this:
  • The “underground economy” would be taxed. If you get paid cash under the table, you’d still pay the tax when you bought something.
Wouldn’t it just get bigger? That is, instead of just cash under the table, would 30% be enough incentive for swap meet type commerce?
  • I have heard some who want to tax all transactions (to include all parts of the supply chain), but I’m not in favor of that, as that would have an inflationary tendency.
That is what occured to me. On the other hand, if you exempt consumption at the ‘non consumer’ level, doesn’t that inherently create a bunch of loopholes?
  • I have heard those who would favor allowing a rebate of taxes paid for up to 2 times the poverty rate in sales. That sounds like a good plan to me, because, as you point out, for those in the lower tax brackets, the tax would be perceived as regressive.
That sounds pretty reasonable to me. At the bottom brackets, it would be a whopping hit. Without some protection it seems that it would either drive inflation or create poverty. On the flip side, I hate the idea of collecting the money from working poor families (who could really use it for things like health care), holding it (presumably without interest) and then spending money giving it back.
Maybe somebody with your degree of wealth doesn’t need to worry about tax, but for those of us who are in the upper-middle class, it’s a stranglehold. If it wasn’t my family’s means of living, it would be funny to hear a politician call me rich. (We’re not poor…but hardly rich). When I have to watch what I spend, when I get worried when the weather is too cold or too hot (as it might shoot my gas and electric bill way out of budget range), when I have to tap dance twice a year when car insurance bill comes in, the adjective “rich” is simply not appropriate.
That’s a little unkind. I pay a lot of tax, and I certainly did not grow up rich, I was born in a house without indoor plumbing. Because of two tours of combat service, I was entitled to some education benefits after Vietnam, but I still worked my way through school.

“Rich” is relative. I know a fair number of people in similiar circumstances to ours, and, like you, they would laugh at being called rich. But you would look at them the way that most people in the world (who have a net worth of about $2000) would look at you.

I’m not trying to be dismissive, I just think that we live in a culture that obsesses on idle weaith, so we tend to think about what we don’t have instead of counting our blessings.

But, the part that still concerns me is the rates you are talking about. I understand you don’t want your income tax to change 2-3% on revenue outside your deductions and in that bracket. But I’m looking at our current situation. We have a $400B structural deficit and $9T in debt. We already need to consider a significant contraction. And we have already cut a lot of our social spending to the bone. Look at Bush’s proposed $3T budget - over $400B in deficit, and massive domestic cuts.

So that pretty much gets down to defense and medicare (cutting social security might make ideological sense to some people, but it doesn’t seem to make much fiscal sense). On the one hand, have we really reaching the point where middle and upper class earners can’t suck it in for a few percent to pay for national defense? My dad fought in WWII, and my worked in a factory and lived with rationing - and they were coming out of the depression.

On the flip side, with the inflation rate of health care, I’m not sure if the middle class could handle massive cuts in medicare. Most spending on medical care occurs in the last 5-10 years of life and I can see Grandma and Grandpa really wiping out a lot of middle class families.

Also, I would worry about higher education. A lot of middle class families use tax deferred accounts to help put their kids through college. Even so, those kids come out with a surprising amount of debt.

And that just reminded me of stock purchases. Are those taxed at the VAT? That would seem to put a damper in 401K type retirement gains.

Again, I’m just asking. It just doesn’t look like that great a deal to me with so many middle income families with our current savings rates and high interest debt rates. Thank you for taking so much time in answering.
 
What gets me about taxes is whenever there is a tax cut for the rich, my taxes go down, and whenever there is a tax increase on the rich, my taxes go up. I sure don’t feel rich.
 
I am a Christian, but aside from being pro-life, I would have to say my views lean leftwards. I am against the Iraq War (who would Jesus bomb?) and capital punishment. Remember, Jesus was killed under capital punishment.

Thumbing through some of the threads, I can’t help but notice a good bit of anti-leftism hanging around. There was once a guy who had some pretty radical views who didn’t get much respect from the churches either. I think his name was Jesus.
I am a Christian too, and I have no use for the left.
 
Someone please pray for me to resist the temptation to use some stupid hockey reference in this thread.😛
 
The core values of the right wing are built upon fundementals of Christianity. So thus a Christian fourm will certainly swing to what we would call the right politicaly. The conservative base has three pillars, social, economic, and foreign policy / national security. Here are some of the big points on each pillar.

Social- That would be anti abortion… "Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We have all heard this. The order of wording is VERY crucial. Life is foremost important so it is first. With out life the remaining can NOT happen. Then liberty and then only after the first two in their respective order can come happiness. To abort a baby would be to deny a baby’s life to serve the mothers happiness and liberty first. Traditional marage would be another example of a social poicy of the right. This pillar is a given among Christians.

Economic- Lower taxes would be one example of this pillar. The left presently is attempting to force on the citezens a energy tax to be good stewards of the earth. There is also talk of nationalized health care and there is the recent expansion of the SCHP program. Take for instance tithe. Tithe is not owed to God… IT IS GOD’s. If I was to feel charitable today and chose to give my tithe to a charity of my choice, how is that charitable? I stole from God to give to a charity I chose and took the credit for it! The political left increases taxes to mandate new programs of health care, wealfare, and other items. These politicians stand on Capitol Hill and tout what great compasion THEY have shown ( …with citezens money.) Our founding fathers held VERY conservative veiws in this arena. They had a deep understanding charity comes from compassion and not from a government’s check book. The Founding Father felt these charitable duties were to come from the Church. Only the Church can fairly administer such duties. Another aspect of this pillar is freedom of government restriction so companies can grow, prosper, and be able to pass these blessing down to employees. Take Job he worked hard was obediant and God blessed him greatly, he lost it all, and gained it again! Did Job not live a part of what we have called the American dream! It is open for us all to participate in!

Foreign policy- Across the world people are living out faithful lives in underground churches. Dictators oppress such as Saddam did. The war in Iraq came only after years of sanctions. Failure to comply with all the UN resolutions passed but one on WMD which there is heavey evidence WMD’s went to Syria two weeks prior to invasion. Saddam has murdered his own people by the thousands. He as well had halted any real advance of Christianity in to Iraq. War is a horrible thing and should only be used as a last resort after mass amounts of prayer. What is even more horrific is to turn a blind eye to the oppression and suffering. Jn15:13 “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for a friend” So we go to war just as God comanded a prayerful Israel in the Old Testament countless times. Take Jesus in the temple driving out the money changers. That was a violent act untill you take note He went away and made a whip. There was a time of prayerful preparation and not a snap judgement… nor is there snap judgement in a true conservative veiw when it comes to war. Iraq is only a small scratch on the surface of that whole situation. Islam holds a few pillars of there own in their religion. Praying, paying alms, aqusition of land for allah, and jihad are a few. A Christian foot hold in the middle east and the Jewish state Israel stands to destroy the very foundation of the Muslim religion. To Muslims “God” is finished with us and for the state of Israel to exist in Muslim land goes against the Koran and destroys their theology. The same goes with Christians and Christian nations liberating Muslim nations. As a side note to the war statistict show we are 5 time more likley to die a violent death (murder, bombing, etc…) in New Orleans and in Washington D.C. than in the now free Iraq.

" The Bible contains the most profound philosophy, the most perfect morality, and most refined policy, that was ever concieved upon earth. It is the most Republican book in the world"
–John Adams
2nd President of the United States
 
I am a Christian, but aside from being pro-life, I would have to say my views lean leftwards. I am against the Iraq War (who would Jesus bomb?) and capital punishment. Remember, Jesus was killed under capital punishment.

Thumbing through some of the threads, I can’t help but notice a good bit of anti-leftism hanging around. There was once a guy who had some pretty radical views who didn’t get much respect from the churches either. I think his name was Jesus.
The core values of the right wing are built upon fundementals of Christianity. So thus a Christian fourm will certainly swing to what we would call the right politicaly. The conservative base has three pillars, social, economic, and foreign policy / national security. Here are some of the big points on each pillar.

Social- That would be anti abortion… "Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We have all heard this. The order of wording is VERY crucial. Life is foremost important so it is first. With out life the remaining can NOT happen. Then liberty and then only after the first two in their respective order can come happiness. To abort a baby would be to deny a baby’s life to serve the mothers happiness and liberty first. Traditional marage would be another example of a social poicy of the right. This pillar is a given among Christians.

Economic- Lower taxes would be one example of this pillar. The left presently is attempting to force on the citezens a energy tax to be good stewards of the earth. There is also talk of nationalized health care and there is the recent expansion of the SCHP program. Take for instance tithe. Tithe is not owed to God… IT IS GOD’s. If I was to feel charitable today and chose to give my tithe to a charity of my choice, how is that charitable? I stole from God to give to a charity I chose and took the credit for it! The political left increases taxes to mandate new programs of health care, wealfare, and other items. These politicians stand on Capitol Hill and tout what great compasion THEY have shown ( …with citezens money.) Our founding fathers held VERY conservative veiws in this arena. They had a deep understanding charity comes from compassion and not from a government’s check book. The Founding Father felt these charitable duties were to come from the Church. Only the Church can fairly administer such duties. Another aspect of this pillar is freedom of government restriction so companies can grow, prosper, and be able to pass these blessing down to employees. Take Job he worked hard was obediant and God blessed him greatly, he lost it all, and gained it again! Did Job not live a part of what we have called the American dream! It is open for us all to participate in!

Foreign policy- Across the world people are living out faithful lives in underground churches. Dictators oppress such as Saddam did. The war in Iraq came only after years of sanctions. Failure to comply with all the UN resolutions passed but one on WMD which there is heavey evidence WMD’s went to Syria two weeks prior to invasion. Saddam has murdered his own people by the thousands. He as well had halted any real advance of Christianity in to Iraq. War is a horrible thing and should only be used as a last resort after mass amounts of prayer. What is even more horrific is to turn a blind eye to the oppression and suffering. Jn15:13 “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for a friend” So we go to war just as God comanded a prayerful Israel in the Old Testament countless times. Take Jesus in the temple driving out the money changers. That was a violent act untill you take note He went away and made a whip. There was a time of prayerful preparation and not a snap judgement… nor is there snap judgement in a true conservative veiw when it comes to war. Iraq is only a small scratch on the surface of that whole situation. Islam holds a few pillars of there own in their religion. Praying, paying alms, aqusition of land for allah, and jihad are a few. A Christian foot hold in the middle east and the Jewish state Israel stands to destroy the very foundation of the Muslim religion. To Muslims “God” is finished with us and for the state of Israel to exist in Muslim land goes against the Koran and destroys their theology. The same goes with Christians and Christian nations liberating Muslim nations. As a side note to the war statistict show we are 5 time more likley per 500,000 people to die a violent death (murder, bombing, etc…) in New Orleans and in Washington D.C. than in the now free Iraq.

" The Bible contains the most profound philosophy, the most perfect morality, and most refined policy, that was ever concieved upon earth. It is the most Republican book in the world"
–John Adams
2nd President of the United States
 
Life is foremost important so it is first. With out life the remaining can NOT happen.
That would be the Catholic view (see CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI #38). But where Catholics differ from some Evangelical Protestants is that we we not value some life more than others. We value life at every stage of development and in every form (again, see CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI, and the decrees of the Second Vatican Council).
Traditional marage would be another example of a social poicy of the right. This pillar is a given among Christians.
This is particularly important to Catholics, because marriage is sacrament. But, again, Catholics and Evangelical Protestants have a slightly different take. EP’s seem only concerned with unconventional unions, but our teaching is broader. We object to divorce, and any attacks on what we consider the foundation of society:
“Analogously [to protection of the human embryo], the family needs to be safeguarded and promoted, based on monogamous marriage between a man and a woman, and protected in its unity and stability in the face of modern laws on divorce: in no way can other forms of cohabitation be placed on the same level as marriage, nor can they receive legal recognition as such. The same is true for the freedom of parents regarding the education of their children; it is an inalienable right recognized also by the Universal Declaration on Human Rights. In the same way, one must consider society’s protection of minors and freedom from modern forms of slavery (drug abuse and prostitution, for example)…”
benedettoxvi.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html

Again, it can seem strange to Evangelical Protestants, but we do not view these as wholly seperate issues, but attacks on the inalienable rights of the human person.
The left presently is attempting to force on the citezens a energy tax to be good stewards of the earth.
This forum, of course, is open to all religious views, but I take exception at calling our Pope part of the “left”. Benedict is very conservative in a Catholic sense.

Yes, he speaks a great deal about our responsibilities to the environment:

guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,2066671,00.html

And, yes, he notes that climate change is direct challenge to the right to life for billions of people. And, yes, he notes that it must be solved at not just the societal level, but by societies working together. But he has also made it clear that he is furthing no one’s ‘political agenda’:

dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/worldnews.html?in_article_id=501316&in_page_id=1811&ito=1490
Failure to comply with all the UN resolutions passed but one on WMD which there is heavey evidence WMD’s went to Syria two weeks prior to invasion.
I’m going to have to sid with our Pope and our President on this one. I know this rumor is popular on right-wing talk radio, but the President has overseen two investigations which turned up no such evidence, and the Vatican reviewed not just those, but two international investigations as well.
As a side note to the war statistict show we are 5 time more likley per 500,000 people to die a violent death (murder, bombing, etc…) in New Orleans and in Washington D.C. than in the now free Iraq.
Actually, I saw the attempt to ‘prove’ that. It actually used the definition ‘premature death’, and included Hurricane Katrina, but it was still false. It used a figure of 30,000 Iraqi deaths, a pre-war population (ignoring millions of refugees) and two different time frames. The most accurate figure we have on direct Iraqi deaths because of the war is about 150,000-154,000, and related deaths of about 266,000-270,000, out of a greatly reduced population (millions of refugees, disproportionately Christian, is something that concerns the Vatican a great deal). But aside from math, it passes the ‘direct comparison’ test. You can fly to New Orleans, go on the street, find a place to eat, sit down, and do so. In Bagdad you can’t leave the green zone without body armor, troops, and air support - and even so, anyone seen with you stands a good chance of being killed in retaliation once you leave.
 
That would be the Catholic view (see CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI #38). But where Catholics differ from some Evangelical Protestants is that we we not value some life more than others. We value life at every stage of development and in every form (again, see CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI, and the decrees of the Second Vatican Council)…
We agree totally here my point is the mothers liberty and happiness CAN NOT go before the life of a child even at the point of conception. Life always comes first.

.This is particularly important to Catholics, because marriage is sacrament. But, again, Catholics and Evangelical Protestants have a slightly different take. EP’s seem only concerned with unconventional unions, but our teaching is broader. We object to divorce, and any attacks on what we consider the foundation of society:.

I know Catholics do not go along with scripture alone… (I’ve heard all the arguements please don’t reply on that topic) But I’ve personaly find through that approach Catholics and I dissagree on maraige almost not at all. One is a sacrament and one a covenant. Set the few differences aside and the mechanics of it work the same… ie the man role is head of the house the same as is the womans the support of her husband. Neither is more important than the other … just different. Divorce is not an option and I’ll be the first to admit Protestant Churches neglegt this aspect of maraige the most. One or two slip of unfaithfulness DOES NOT give grounds for divorce as popularly believed. But the this is politicaly slanted topic …“Too many right-wingers in this forum?” Traditional maraige perfect policy …no lacking … yes but is a starting point politically speaking. It is a fundemental neccessaty to protect the family and in turns protects the country.

.Again, it can seem strange to Evangelical Protestants, but we do not view these as wholly seperate issues, but attacks on the inalienable rights of the human person…

No not strange at all. There is a across the board underminding of the family in society and in government. They left is hammering away at the family’s foundation. The right is as well to some extent. The difference is on is taking us there in a truck and the other in a Lear jet! These were just a few battles listed in the war on the family.

.This forum, of course, is open to all religious views, but I take exception at calling our Pope part of the “left”. Benedict is very conservative in a Catholic sense…

I never called the Pope part of the left. I am not famillar with his veiws. I could not say.

.Yes, he speaks a great deal about our responsibilities to the environment:.

Enviroment was not the point. The point is the policy of the left and how they use taxes. They spend our money in the name of humanity/charity. It is not a charitable act for them to steal your money through taxes and fund abortion “charities.”

.And, yes, he notes that climate change is direct challenge to the right to life for billions of people. And, yes, he notes that it must be solved at not just the societal level, but by societies working together. But he has also made it clear that he is furthing no one’s ‘political agenda’:.

Enviroment should we protect? yes. Global (GW) warming real? who knows. I personaly feel we as humans are to insignificant to affect God’s creation on such a large scale. Are we affecting the recent changes in the suns tempature? How about GW on Mars? Science today in 2007/08 points both ways. GW activists often put up statistics that go againts each other. I have some news paper articles from 30 years ago talking of how to melt the Polar caps and change artic river flows to stop Global Cooling. To be an enviromentalist in support of stoping GW you would have to become a vegan. The other option is be a hypocrite as livestock produces more gasses than all of man and his inventions. I believe that Jesus will return to judge the quick and the dead… so obviously we wil be here. While enviroment is important the lost soul next door is far more important.

.I’m going to have to sid with our Pope and our President on this one. I know this rumor is popular on right-wing talk radio, but the President has overseen two investigations which turned up no such evidence, and the Vatican reviewed not just those, but two international investigations as well…

I’ve not heard this on talk radio but from interveiws in Airforce and Army publications with officers in Iraq and other declasified reports that are in public circulation. Still 14 of 15 resolutions failed not to mentions thousands of Iraqi people dead under Saddams. So would it have been better to turn a blind eye? What about the churches and missionaries moving in to sperad the news?

.Actually, I saw the attempt to ‘prove’ that. It actually used the definition ‘premature death’, and included Hurricane Katrina, but it was still false. It used a figure of 30,000 Iraqi deaths,… … You can fly to New Orleans, go on the street, find a place to eat, sit down, and do so. In Bagdad you can’t leave the green zone without body armor, troops, and air support - and even so, anyone seen with you stands a good chance of being killed in retaliation once you leave.

Not sure what report you are talking of. The one I read did not include huricane Katrina. It came from th government and was limited to violent deaths, not accidental. It said chances were 1/500,000 in Iraq and 4.6/500,000 in N.O. and in D.C. our two most violent cities.
 
I hope this is not too off topic, but I’d seriously like someone to explain to me why this is such a popular idea. It would actually be a big tax cut for me, but it seems like it would be a pretty large tax increase for most of midde America, particularly home owners, and definately an increase on working Americans under the income tax threshold.

I also wonder how the government would deal with big ticket items. A 20-30% tax on home sales raises some interesting questions. Also, avoiding even state sales taxes on big ticket items is pretty much a science among the wealthy. I recently bought a vintage GA airplane and the broker looked like he was passing a kidney stone when I told him I did not want to do the normal game to avoid CA sales tax. So I suspect collecting 20-30% tax on yachts and jets would be difficult.

Again, I’m not looking to pick a fight, I’m just really curious why this appeals to a lot of folks who would generally end up paying more, not less, as a result.
The amount we pay on our house in real estate taxes yearly is the equilivant of 3% of its current market value. (an amount we could never get for it because it is rural and has no public utilities except for electric)

If we go by the amount we paid for the house at purchase (it was what we could afford on our income) the taxes now run us around 18% of its origional cost every year. Times this by the 30 years we have lived here. So we have paid over 3x our origional purchase price just in taxes on our home. And the cost goes up every year. A 20 or 30% sales tax paid over the mortgage sounds like a bargan.
 
I am a Christian, but aside from being pro-life, I would have to say my views lean leftwards. I am against the Iraq War (who would Jesus bomb?) and capital punishment. Remember, Jesus was killed under capital punishment.

Thumbing through some of the threads, I can’t help but notice a good bit of anti-leftism hanging around. There was once a guy who had some pretty radical views who didn’t get much respect from the churches either. I think his name was Jesus.
LOL. Every single position of the left is contrary to Christian principles.
 
I hope this is not too off topic, but I’d seriously like someone to explain to me why this is such a popular idea. It would actually be a big tax cut for me, but it seems like it would be a pretty large tax increase for most of midde America, particularly home owners, and definately an increase on working Americans under the income tax threshold.

I also wonder how the government would deal with big ticket items. A 20-30% tax on home sales raises some interesting questions. Also, avoiding even state sales taxes on big ticket items is pretty much a science among the wealthy. I recently bought a vintage GA airplane and the broker looked like he was passing a kidney stone when I told him I did not want to do the normal game to avoid CA sales tax. So I suspect collecting 20-30% tax on yachts and jets would be difficult.

Again, I’m not looking to pick a fight, I’m just really curious why this appeals to a lot of folks who would generally end up paying more, not less, as a result.
A flat tax on income has some appeal, but is not probably not achievable because you really have to exempt folks under a certain income, or accept the gross inefficiencies of taxing with one hand and returning the tax as aid with the other. We already have this problem with the payroll tax/earned income tax credit situation.

The problem with sales, consumption and value added taxes is that they are extremely regressive. (which is probably why you would save money with them). Few things are more predictable in ecomonics than that the less money you make the higher percentage of your income you spend. The poor spend 100% of their income, and often spend over 100% for a fairly long period. So a 10% VAT is a 10% of their income. For the upper middle class it may be half that. For the very rich, even less. It seems ‘fair’ because we pay based on the portion of the nation’s goods we consume. But that is not a good measure of what we draw from the economy, necessarily, and its a very bad measure of the value we get from government services.

To really drift from topic, one of the great myths of tax reform is that the poor consume most of the government’s services. That seems truu intuitively, and may even be true in gross (maybe), but the rich and middle class get by far more economic value from the government and government action, and they should pay for that. In the current system they do. Any flat consumption tax should maintain that, which will be tough if its flat. (Exempting food and rent can maybe get you there, maybe.)
 
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